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About Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 3, 1914)
TWO THB DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, - SALEM, OREO ON, THTTSSPAT. SEPTEMBER 3, 1914. ALL EUROPE FIRST SNAPSHOT OF GEORGE M. H. COHAN TAKEN WITH HIS PARENTS WILL 1 li RE run mm inn from 45 lo 55 TESTIFY TotheMeritof Lydia EPink ham's Vegetable Com pound during Change of Life. Westbrook, Me. " I was passing through the Change of Life and bad I paint in my back and side and was to weak I could hardlv do my housework. 1 have taken Lydia ELFinkham's Vege table Compound and it has done me a lot . 1 1 T Ml x : VI UUU. X Will ro- ijfZaJ commena your med icine to my friends and give you permis- llun til milillnh nnw testimonial." Mra. Lawrence Mar tin, 12 King St, Westbrook, Maine. Manaton, Wis. "At the Change of Life I nlTered with pnlna In my back and loins until I could not stand. I also bad night-sweats so that the sheets would be wet I tried other medicine but got no relief. After taking one bot- r 7: MM' 1 l!l Italy Compelled to Join Allies , If Turkey Goes to Aid of Germany BALKANS WILL AGAIN BE ABLAZE WITH WAR If Italy Joins Mies, It VYill Re a a. iim quire Austria s Wnole Strength to Fight Her T. n ruin n fimit 3 Thrrtno'a Visa war ' i ft ' " iroiinrfil (linriMiiizntinn of rnminitninn- lion linos, C'oiiHttntiuopIo hat been cut a Use for six months. The hero that the sultan was preparing rap e, the night-sweats and hot j',,,y 'Bke Part the Bre8t European r less, and in one year I was ciiflii t. womiin. I know I have to I Neither was it doubted that he world . .aak . MinuiK v.ia. iiiiii nii,-n. i m niiuiiuuu n nu uhi-i. i'iie tie of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable 'off from western Kurope for several Compound I began to improve and I I days past, hut email doubt was folt annf iniuvl Ita nu fnp !v mrntKi Thn ; hern that the allltnn Willi nrpnarintr run- pains left me, flashes crew - .Kir. a M r l t i . 1...1.U !'"' iii his lot with the German ami vpp in"Mni M J Nbownfi f Aimtro-Hungnrmn allies, not so much ever since. - Mrs. M. J. BROWNEIX, of 18rJiaIity for th Tcn. Bansum, wis. tonic pen.les but because he deemed The success of Lydia E. Finkham s j himself more likely to repain throug.i Vrgetable Compound, made from root J j them the Kuropea'n territories he lost and herbs, is unparalleled in such cases, jby the Balkan war. If job want special advice wrltolo! 1Abo,,.t. thi,l' w" tnted em t ji v i iv w it t r i n . politically in diplomatic circles, there Ijdla E. rinkham Medicine Co. (confl- i lueCii ut 1)fl ,nr ' tioB. a atlal) Lynn, Mass. Yonr letter will j if the Turks" do engage in the strug be opened, read and answered by I jl ami the Anulo-Friuico Kuaso Sorvian woman, and held In strict confidence, ' eonibinathin wins as all conndenre i wan expressed it would do Ottoman j power in Kurope would end summarily. .Nevertheless, some anxiety was ex pressed concerning the injection of the I Turkish factor into the situation. I War Field to Enlarge. i For one tinner all ntrriil U wnnM quickly involve all the ilalkans in the war. ureeen, it was lliouglit, would De involved immediately. With Turkey, Mervui, Wontcncro and Greece enjoin ed, it was deemed certain that Bulgaria could not keep out of the fight u.any days ami perhaps not many hours. Bulgaria, despite conflicting reports, would line up with the German faction, it wag thoimht: R iiinaiiia. with tha llril. isb, French, Rm-siaus and Servians. -iiaiy, xoo, it was predicted, would be drawn intn thn fiolit af nnoi Thi. minlit mean revolution, diplomats ad- nimca, out tne Koine government s Mediterranean interests would be so seriously threatened by the Turkish complication that it would h am.-..l.i for it to Ignore the situation, and do mestic, revolt would have to be risked. revolutions roared. Revollltiong. indeed. nina aiithnritiaa said, had been reckoned with as possi bilities by most of the governments en gaged in the war, and all of them recog nised that thia dantuir wnuM lnrMi a. the struggle progressed and the people oegan 10 icei its pressure more severe ly. The time of greatest peril would 1 i I ! 1 fl.H" ' :-:! ' " ' n':----:-rrTC'vf 9 ss.a,toy. is t f, Mr and Mas- - 4 . 1 k SEORGt M COHAM I t 4 H Waster GEORGE f v J T 4. V '- - vv-.i MICHAEL jLM . ' I . i W HARRIS COHAN ST-'A I . J eioTo ft&W . lUO K J ' J y r fi g Skin of Beauty is a Joy Forsvtr r.8. t. Fan gouraud's oriental CREAM OR UCICAL BEABTiriEP rveme II. ill I-irh. KimI, .ml hktm 1)1.. )M1 rvtrf blrtnl 'w butr. ui at IW. ll'I.CttlMI. I Iuk WUmA IM U f (HI. .1,1 U M harmltu f 1 I1111.H tnb.nur.1: Arctrf noounii't 1.4 of MlulUl u-bw. Ip L. a St Bid lO I UJr hint t i ynilvtit N At yui Urfltu a, ibnx 7 T."i .... . f. pr.ixwkna." Kr aalt 1 drfu Ma Flnr Hooai 1)mi Is u UoiU4 Stan, Oauui ul Siv frriT-imnts. rma. i? ersi km sw it t m.l JJLgJ . I.. . J fiOBXDALE NEWS NOTES. (Capital Journal Special Service.) Bevival meetings are in prngrosn at tha Friends church and a gool interest la being shows, the attendance is gin J. Neit Hunday aa all-day service is plan ned. Com and bring your dinner and enjoy the day. Mr. L. M. Crorer has returned from nnzon aau is planning to move to rhoenix soon. Mr. and Mrs, 0. J. Sherman and Vr. and Mra. H. L. Cox, of I'ortland, spvin few days last wsek visiting C. A. lladlcy. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pemhertun, f La Urnnd, Iowa, ent a few days visit ing his sisters, Mrs. Idu Bates umi -Mrk, W. K. Croaer. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bates spent a few days last week at Newport. Mrs. Bell Badley, nho has been vis- King ar suiter, ftlrs, V. A. Hadl luraed to l'ortlsnd Thursday. Kev. C. O. Wbitlev, ot irwberg, vis Ited W, E. Crewr Monday and Tues day. in addition to toasting of 'u swiminliis beacli and It board wail;. Loiit: Beach, L. I., this summer boasts of being the home of Master George .Michael Uarrin Cohan, six mouths eld, and only son of .Mr. George M. Cohnu, actor, man' sgornnd dramatist, niu! Mrs. Cohan. The youthful heir to the millions which bU father has begun to accumulate In the theatrical business will celebrate bis half year birthday on July 18. Presented herewith Is the first photograph of hlm4 taken with Mr. and Mrs. Cohan at Long Beach on July 4, a day with which iiU riitlwr's nnme often has been associated. How Many Seconds to Your Telephone? How long does it take you to answer your telephone bell? Our records show thirty-four seconds as the average time consum ed from the time you place a call to the time it is answered by the party called, and that most of this time is necessary in getting 'a re sponse after the bell has been rung. The Telephone Operator has no authority to compel an answer to her summons. She simply forwards to your telephone a mechanical signal, which, interpreted, means "Some one N desires to speak with you." It remains with you, the person called, to recognize this request by responding promptly. Remember, delay on your part means the inconvenience of another. Every Bell Telephons is a Long Distance Station The Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co, WHO WAS NEWSPAPER REPORTER Sense of Humor of Modest Euler Is Trial of His Ministers, la Beloved of His People for Whom He Has Accomplished Much. lU-y, to- A Journal Want Ad worka longer hours for leu money thaui any other form of public ity yem can buy. ccrr.c, .hswevuf. if iiothiuir mutfiriiilipAil earlier, it wits geuerally agreed, after the war mas over and the devastated nations had time to appreciate fully what ruin had been wrought. Ketnrning to tho Turkish menace, due weiuht Was aiven here to the twiwiliilitv that the sultan, as head of tho Mohain- nieusn cnurvu, might arouse against the British their mosU'at subjects in Egypt an I ml is and stir up the people of the same faith in Prance's North African DOSSes.tilUlS. li waa ai.l .11 possible precautions were being taken 111 all Ikaio twin. 1- . 1 .. ... ... Mirnr ivuilllir IU UIW 3UC D Sll' uation vigorously and promptly. - Filially thouvh this nnint wo. .1!.. ciiaged only in whispers, tiia allies real- una umi h wouki De suicidal for t:i m to disaeree aa vet th Turk. k..;., .... pcllwl from Kurope, all knew the' eon- roi oi uie L'sriancllci would at once become an imnn nf ranif.l between Oi-eat Britain and Bussia. Ptaading sunremelr the figures who are making history in the Br CUt War. Which will mark a era for Europe, is Albert, king of the iit'iguins, newspapermen, expert engi iiri-r. luvrr or niaDHinii mH th. I democratic of all rulers. Nobody ever heard much of Albert Leopold Clement Maria Meinrad before that eventful day when he sent word to his soldiers at Liege to "hold out" against the Gcrmaus massing at Her bestal. The exhortation breathed such a dauntless, bombastic assurance that those who read smiled grimly and a lit tle sadlv as thev rafWiiul n.oi . J . l VUMV till KOHLER & CHASE NOW SELLING STOCK OF THE SAVAGE PIANO HOUSE ! 7v , ""'.i,'""u'J ie a recont the low 11 Z J" X.t.tZ'V ot b .!the retail piano dealer .1 Z . . I ,n ,UB0 Bn"1' A whoUale Tenresentative I. I. IZlrZ '"errand piano, and Mare. i'd ...VUB., .... , ,nuo, ,0 t rouad Prices As Low As ar d aew in the nimiin .l-I aca ,. . r"w AS tt- cake's whUh they are JienV. fo? ttriw $T4 f io vM t. tt 1 a "v i IM " on. Players, the Teuton war hosts. But Liege haa long held out, and Al bert. Killlf of Beluium. whi..h i..l,..l.,. some sizable cities and is said to ejoy nuro prosperity per capita than any Other Krtronaan immlr . ;.un A the head of his army of 200,000 men. uiKvuirerung nis valiant men he has found time to notifv in this country that the credit of Bel- aium is unimpaired and that all wheat shippers may send their grain to Ant werp, with the euarantee of th am-. ernutetit that they will not only be paid in ...il.l k... .1. -.1 '. . uu mn mi ineir war risKS will be covered. Europe QUres at His Democracy. Kurope, last haven of "the divine right of kings,' in the Occidental world, has long glared impotentlv at Albert, King of Belgium. His casual democracy, his undoubted business abil ity and his manner of dealing with the socialists, so that the socialists, cursing most labor conditions, pauxed to praise their ruler, has worried them almost in to prostration. He is called, in the circles While here he studied about every con ceivable industry in tho country. On his return he wrote a book about Amer ica, which evidenced the fact that his idea of an ideal government was the one this country had adopted. Having been a rojHirter for a long time, he saw things keenly and clearly, and being the only reporter who is now a king, he has developed a sense of humor which is said to be the dread of his prosaic cabinet ministers and his enemies, none of whom ever acnuirl that trait to such a considerable ex tent. The king, who is a great cyclist and an extraordinary brave man, went to the Congo and pierced that fever rid den country soon after his accession to the throne. The things he saw there caused him to sell all of his nobsessions most of Beluiuin in that reirion alter he had ameliorated the conditions under which the natives lived. Dismantled Wooden Navy. The one desire of the king was to establish a merchant' marine and latcT a navy. After he had reviewed the ' ' navy ' ' of Belgium in the first days of his reign he ordered all of the vessels dismantled. They were wooden hulks, and every time they anweared at for- rcmoving "The Masses" and "The Menace" from the library. Mr. ll iri was not present at the meeting, but when he beard of the decision he wrote to every member, quoting an irtido in the state constitution in .vhioh the right of free speech and u fro, nr.-ss is established. Mr. McBaiu, -resident of the board, threatened to resign if tho two papers wero placed back in the library. This is the age of advertising. It is the age cf direct appeal to the consumer. It is the age of suggestive selling and of scientific merchandising -AA.'- A A A A .... . MOM source of vast amusement. The queen Jiis convert, is a full fledg ed physician. She was Elizabeth, the daughter of the Duke Carl Theodore of Bavaria, the famous oculist. As t'.ie king is constant lv seen about the ninrsle. of Antwerp, where he once gathered jt news ior a newspaper, conversing with stevedores. SO tha ntiaim aviilAn.-a War democratic spirit bv being seen work- nj n tne slums ot Brussels. She has established hospitals in. many places in; Belgium, and is head of an association! of women who strive te ameliorate con- j muom under wnicn natu worKmj ioiK live. Tne king is an indefatigable worker. Ho rises at six iu thj morning and rare ly ever ceases, work until, five in the afternoon. As a mechanical engineer he has personally supervised the opera tion Of the Ureal .tola railrnaa in.f-.l ling American lounging cars and sleep ing . , .. ; family Lirss La Simplicity. The simplicity in which th roval .v.-1 family lives is reuiarkablo. Tiuv id player! that wonderful buving per uiR of ("socialist king,"' but," whatever hisl!y th 'et plc. prvfe-mng ike a record; the low prices which can be offr-.l ,! political Mief, the fact remains taat ln a v.,Ua u,r by. They are icm. U. f.'thn nil niu.. .I.,....,. he hs hrnii.rh Id. ....... - uuin rovers Of Dillnur AUil ai..linv atA&.a.i devful state of prosperity and the state;1" . 1h S111 Per Jeue, railrea.U under his direct sHjvervision ! ,rat er ton ,he ro-rnl bos, so they msy' have become a little more profitable 1 J?'a"'r ,h orv'hr than any iu this countrv. rhe P"vate life of the king is with-1 There are few thiuiTa thai rhia . out '"strain and he has long beim called ! ompliN, king cannot do er hasn't . wot ""sjiectable ruler." The! the Knabe, Ves. 4 8o., Tver. 4 I'ond,! 7 V. EI? !hl their ow. mske the Kohler ret.U price. U" the Andrew Kohler, Shoniager, Kohleri Kasy t'rin m k. .11 .1. A CampH, J. a C. Kiher, kmerson withiif,. u buv on W SuitaM. .T and ethers. It i. aeedlewi te state that' ran-iUt, f bo ''"dl ta .k- . firm i. th. whole tountry can boast' of all wvaien, ,ft the itor. it f a aeloetion such as is found with this' closed. th t0, U . a , J - Ui. sale started this rn pitnd bunini on t.OnJ, f ilfjltH. rnlt. ivimu WW.. . a - " - ...o puvifl engages in aviation, engiueerine royal couple have three children, two sons and a danchtor. the bit and writiu witH -xivial Ucilitv. He KM'at favorite with tko peoile. In it n ordinary newspapor man for a T ' wignini me ruler; long time, carrving a )olie eanl, visit- ,"i0nir? 1,,ifHT Vnown Jeronally to' K pe'ice stations and doing what ,,bJ,n and there is hardly a spot j would be known here as ''skip news." . 'K1""" with which the roval couple; As a reporter, it is said, he was a.wJ?.n fmii'- j "snappy" worker, who scored many' . ' whr Leon Vandervelte, tJo: bests and obtained timelv pictures. Ios-; ."0''l lrt ,,,,,r. newly apoiuted min-! sibly his stay in America in lsftH, when i utel! ' ",t' rwrgium, most deroo- he little dreamed of being kinc. save I "r",t"f "f lo'nN snid to his eom-l A , . , , i. ""r u sale started this im h traiuiug ae.ewarv to st a new nnrm " other (lav: 1 the l..lfin'..; ZLV ,wi if. ?0B wat oedidrd for Suick uewajviMr work ia! '"It w for oor kint and! the laeifie toast sel tioB come tonigit betwee. Bmsssls and A.tw.r. . country as we have arwav, Wh, for ! nesa has grown until , anj nm, or the f imt tkina- tonwirr- Yawn. KtB.Tai-.- ' the b.borinff .- ' ' ' f" Fifty-third Annual DREG STATE .FAIR SALEM, OREGON September 28 to October 3 REDUCED RATES ON ALL RAILROADS. I SIX DAYS OF PROFIT, SIX DAYS OF PLEASURE J $20,000.00 9 In Cash Premiums for Agricultural, Live Stock, Poultry, Textile and Other Exhibits, Horse Races, Band Concerts, Eugenics Ex- gl Iii TTS -a a- ' "v ... T I posiuon, lavenmg musical entertainments and Other Free Attrac tions. Free Camp Grounds. YOU ARE INVITED SEND FOR PREMIUM LIST AND ENTRY BLANKS- It . - w- - - " -- iiuu vuuiv ion it; bi oetweesi et Wince tbea the buslnesa has grown until anj uin. or the first thing tomorrow larrj ( vw, iri.r.-nHunj u ai-1 iois is your opportuaitv. Don't i-at most every eonnty in California, Ore-off InvestlKStiug until the itk is jrnu, nuuu(ioa sua iu.uo. in ie picKeti over. Tker are) en! ITioii r atatea fjiH rjtittinea ia .omliictai! nn a wholesale basis. Think of the wonder-! arty pianos and players altoirthe- rJi at th cricee thev ara lwiaa- ntt i ... . v.. 1-1. , . -. -i .i i .J vama. ......m v. .u l-liHU- I . IU. priTIW B p y fill buying power a house must have do-, they won 1 last long. ITJQHLER & CHASE Wholesale Piano Dealer Yenna Kins a Stalwart King AlWrt ie wore than si feet in weight aad has fair eomplexioa and golden hair. It k thirtv-aian years eld is married to a wnnaa tn kLENAOS SUTJ-f OTJT. .. I Oret-oa Cit no j t '' . t tW t flV tha likra.v L I .a - , whom he is nniKually devoted and has CLiT Ub.r"r-T WH et three children. He i the of the:!7!!! riT night, killed deaf duke of Klsn.ler.. lfch i" rJ" ' W. V 'K . . . : "" " " w u nlaca TV . ... mysterious death of k brother, tha ! w . ""7 " 'nc UDrry - Briace ef Handoiu, whie. mad. his aSi thi rlL? Tvt Pent mneh time in N. Yk wllZ '. T. SALEM. OREGONI5S3 StXtt FQFigSsSXii For Particulars Address . Frank Meredith, Secretary, SALEM, OREGON. t 4 4AAA-a-4f4.a HMmi.i . .. aa aAi::: riTTTTT-"- ' lllimi ..444W 'Taaaaaa aaa.A.A. a . . . . - A.., TTTTTTTTvvttttt t e e e e e